Peace Gene,
Essentially I agree with that statement, but I feel it needs to be explained better. If I am reading correctly I am understanding it as such:
The Qur'an is complete and requires no change nor is any change permitted. The duty of the "preacher" is to guide people into living a life relevent to the Qur'an not try to make the Qur'an relevent to their lives.
Thanks. I thought that you would agree with it, at least the ethos behind it, if not the exact terminology used to express that thought. One of the reasons I asked is the source of that comment. It was the lead paragraph of an article written in a conservative Christian magazine with regard to preaching and the Bible (I of course change the word "Bible" to "Qur'an" to get your take on it). So, given that both in this post from a Christian source wtih regard to the Bible and your own post the other day with regard to the Qur'an (the one that Hugo altered) we can see how Christian approachs to the Bible and Muslim approaches to the Qur'an are so similiar, why do we continue to argue with each other? Yes, I know that we would like to convince each other of the truth of our own respective positions. But, serious, I don't think that is going to happen on a internet forum. So, why can't we appreciate that the other's position with regard to their own sacred texts are very similar to our own an leave it at that? Why the constant barage of attacks asserting that people are hypocritics or don't respect their texts or otherwise have ignored or devalued them.
We have each arrived at what we accept as our sacred texts. We have gone about that process in different ways, but we nonetheless each of sacred texts with which we share these things in common:
They are sacred.
They are understood as revealed to us by God.
They are inspired literature, God using the medium of men to give us his word rather than writing it in the sky or speaking it in a loud voice from heaven.
They express who God is and what he expects from us his servants.
They are a guide to both worship and daily living.
In the we "authentically hear God".
They were received over a period of time, but are today set and codified.
They are today complete and require no change nor is any change permitted.
All of these points we share in common, and yet they also seem to be things that we have each arrived at as basic assumptions we bring to the text. That is we don't test the truth of the above statements, we believe them and accept them as being true without needing to be tested. Still, others who are not of our own persuasion will challenge those assumptions. So, in the light of that another assumption I have is that there is a right way in which to express those challenges and there is a wrong way to respond when those challenges are made.
What would the dispassionate (meaning not emotionally reactive, not meaning to be without love for the Qur'an) Muslim see as the preferred way to make these challenges to another's basic assumptions and how should one go about responding when those challenges are raised to their own sacred texts?